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No. 20 Kansas State comes up short against 5th-ranked Auburn 20-14

KSUMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Gus Malzahn squeezed into the ramshackle shed used for postgame news conferences at Kansas State, gripped both sides of the makeshift podium and exhaled deeply.

Fifth-ranked Auburn had just squeezed out a 20-14 victory over the No. 20 Wildcats, and its coach was asked whether it was the kind of nip-and-tuck nonconference game that he likes to play.

“After they’re over and you win, yeah,” Malzahn said. “You do.”

Aubun’s vaunted ground game held in check all night, the Tigers finally pulled away when they went to the air. Nick Marshall threw for 231 yards and two touchdowns, and Auburn forced a trio of turnovers while capitalizing on three missed field goals by the Wildcats.

Still, the game wasn’t over until Marshall found D’haquille Williams running wide open on third-and-9 at the Auburn 37. The completion with 2:06 remaining went for 39 yards, a first down that effectively ended the game, and gave the Tigers (3-0) their first nonconference road win over a ranked team since knocking off Florida State in 1984.

“Our guys found a way,” Malzahn said. “I told them after the game, I think this could be a game that really helps us in the future, because we faced some major adversity tonight.”

Not nearly as much as Kansas State.

Jake Waters threw for 245 yards, but he also tossed two picks — one in the Auburn end zone. The Wildcats (2-1) also fumbled the ball away, and Jack Cantele missed those crucial field goals.

Still, the Wildcats tried to rally in the closing minutes, scoring on a run by Charles Jones out of the wildcat formation with 3:49 left. But after holding the Tigers to third down, Marshall took advantage of one more miscue — a bad call on defense — for a first down to seal it.

“There was a ton of mistakes that we made that impacted the outcome,” Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said. “Auburn is a tremendous football team and we just made too many mistakes.”

The result was Kansas State’s lowest point total in more than three years.

“It hurts a lot,” wide receiver Tyler Lockett said. “We left a lot out there on the field. One of the plays I remember, I dropped a touchdown that turned into an interception. Missed field goals, fumbled the ball. We just made a lot of mistakes today.”

Auburn was the highest-ranked team to play in Manhattan since second-ranked Penn State in 1969, and an overflow crowd started tailgating Tuesday. The festivities continued until shortly after kickoff, when the Wildcats started to throw away opportunities to spring an upset.

The first serious miscue was a fumbled handoff deep in Kansas State territory. Auburn hopped on the loose ball and, four plays later, kicked a 34-yard field goal to take a 3-0 lead.

The second turnover was even more costly. The Wildcats had second-and-goal from the Auburn 2, and Waters zipped a pass that bounced off Lockett’s shoulder pads in the end zone. Rather than an easy touchdown, the ball was picked off by the Tigers’ Jonathan Jones.

“Coach always says you get interceptions on tips and overthrows,” Jones said.

The Wildcats kept buckling down on defense, though, stuffing Auburn’s read-option attack. The Tigers had just 55 yards rushing in the first half, the fewest in the Malzahn era.

The nation’s best team in converting third downs also failed on its first five attempts.

“We knew it wasn’t going to be easy,” Marshall said. “Adversity hit us and we wanted to see how we would respond, and we responded well.”

Kansas State finally scored with 4:56 left in the first half when DeMarcus Robinson scampered in from 3 yards out for his first career touchdown. But the Tigers hurried the other way, capping a 75-yard drive with Marshall’s 40-yard strike to Ricardo Louis for a 10-7 lead.

Cantele pushed a potential tying field-goal attempt wide on the final play of the half, his second miss of the night. He hooked one wide left late in the first quarter.

He made it a frustrating hat-trick midway through the third quarter.

The Wildcats had once again marched downfield, and once again pushed the ball inside the Auburn 5. But after the Tigers stiffened, Cantele was summoned to try a 22-yarder — a mere chip-shot, hardly more than an extra point. He missed it wide right.

The Tigers tacked on a touchdown and a field goal, eventually putting the game out of reach.

“It was a collective team loss,” Kansas State defensive end Ryan Mueller said. “There were some missed opportunities there and that’s all I can really say.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals outlast Milwaukee and win in 13 innings

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Tony Cruz singled in the winning run in the 13th inning and the St. Louis Cardinals moved closer to their second straight NL Central title with a 3-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday night.

The defending National League champions took two of three in a tight series that featured only 12 runs and another game that lasted 12 innings, and lead the division by 2 1/2 games with nine games to go. They begin their final home series of the year Friday night with the first of three against Cincinnati.

Aramis Ramirez and Scooter Gennett had an RBI apiece for the Brewers, who are five games back and 3 1/2 out for the second NL wild card. Jonathan Lucroy’s 45th double tied the major league record for a catcher set by Ivan Rodriguez in 1996 and was his major league-leading 52nd overall.

Cruz singled up the middle with one out for the third hit of the 13th against Jimmy Nelson (2-8) and Matt Adam scored from second.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou-UCONN Agree to home-and-home football series

riggertMizzouThe University of Missouri and the University of Connecticut have finalized an agreement to play a home-and-home football series between the two schools, as announced today jointly by both athletic programs.

Mizzou and UCONN will meet for the first time ever on the gridiron when the Huskies visit Columbia, Mo. for a game on September 19, 2015.  The Tigers will return the game two years later, and play at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Conn. on September 23, 2017.  The Huskies have played in five bowl games during the past 10 seasons, including an appearance in the 2011 Fiesta Bowl.

The agreement with UCONN helps Mizzou get closer to finishing out its 2015 schedule, as three of the four non-conference games are now set, with games scheduled for Sept. 5 against Southeast Missouri State, a road game on Sept. 12 at Arkansas State, in addition to the UCONN contest.  The 2017 schedule has two non-conference games remaining to be filled around a Sept. 16 home date with Purdue and the Sept. 23 road game at UCONN.

“We’re really pleased to be able to reach an agreement to schedule UCONN,” said Executive Associate Athletic Director Bryan Maggard, who oversees football scheduling.  “It’s fun to bring new opponents into Columbia for our fans, and this is a program that’s had a high level of success in the past decade.  One of the most challenging aspects of conference realignment has involved football scheduling, and reconstructing things after we moved to the SEC.  We’re getting really close to having 2015 taken care of and being able to move on to future schedules, so that’s very exciting,” he said.

The 18th-ranked Tigers continue preparations for Saturday’s home contest against the Indiana Hoosiers.  Kickoff for the game is set for 3:00 p.m.

— MU Sports Information —

Royals rough up Sale, White Sox to close AL Central gap

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Lorenzo Cain hit a three-run homer, Nori Aoki kept up his tear at the plate and the Kansas City Royals roughed up Chicago White Sox ace Chris Sale in a 6-2 victory Wednesday night that kept the pressure on Detroit in the AL Central.

The first-place Tigers led the Royals by 1 1/2 games at the start of the night.

Alcides Escobar also homered for a Royals offense that had been scuffling for weeks, and Aoki went 3 for 4 to finish with 11 hits in the series. Yordano Ventura (13-10) allowed three hits and two walks over seven innings, the lone run off him coming on a sacrifice fly.

Meanwhile, Sale (12-4) was cuffed for a season-high five earned runs on nine hits over five innings. It was arguably the three-time All-Star’s worst start since Aug. 23, 2013, when he gave up eight runs over seven innings in a loss to the Rangers.

The White Sox loaded the bases with nobody out in the third inning, and Adam Eaton staked them to a lead with his sacrifice fly. But Ventura calmly struck out the next two batters to get out of trouble, and then kept Chicago guessing with a blazing fastball all night.

It didn’t take Kansas City long to take the lead for good.

In the bottom of the third, Escobar and Aoki hit back-to-back singles before Cain sent a pitch over the left-field wall. The three-run homer was the first allowed by Sale on a 0-2 count in his career — 164 appearances and nearly 670 batters over parts of five seasons.

Escobar added his solo shot with two outs in the fourth. His third homer of the season and first since May 11 landed in almost the exact same spot as Cain’s home run.

Aoki doubled in the first inning, singled in the third and fourth and walked in the sixth, earning a standing ovation. His 11 hits against the White Sox broke the Royals record for a three-game series that had been shared by George Brett (1982) and Willie Wilson (1980).

It was also the first time a Kansas City player had three hits in three straight games since Mike Sweeney accomplished the feat from July 8-10, 2005, according to STATS.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: DH-1B Paul Konerko, out since breaking his left hand on Sept. 2, will likely return this weekend in Tampa Bay. “Give him a couple of at-bats and if he’s up for it he can probably DH one of those games and see how it feels,” manager Robin Ventura said.

Royals: INF Christian Colon (broken middle finger) was placed on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to Sept. 7. There was no word on whether the Royals are adding another player to the roster.

UP NEXT

White Sox: LHP Jose Quintana (8-10, 3.30 ERA) starts Friday night’s opener in Tampa Bay.

Royals: LHP Jason Vargas (11-9, 3.41) tries to bounce back from a loss to Boston in the opener of a crucial three-game series against the Tigers on Friday night.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright throws complete-game against Brewers to earn 19th win

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Adam Wainwright posted his 19th win, pitching a shutout Wednesday night as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Milwaukee Brewers 2-0 to hold their 2 1/2-game edge in the NL Central.

Wainwright (19-9) worked around seven hits and tied for the major league lead in wins and shutouts.

St. Louis has won four of five and kept its advantage over second-place Pittsburgh. Milwaukee dropped 2 1/2 games behind the Pirates for the second NL wild-card spot.

Mike Fiers (6-3) held the Cardinals hitless until Wainwright singled up the middle with two outs in the sixth. It was Fiers’ first start since beaning Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton last week, ending his season.

Wainwright struck out seven and walked two in his ninth career shutout. He has thrown three shutouts this year, matching Detroit’s Rick Porcello and Miami’s Henderson Alvarez for most in the majors.

Wainwright and Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw are atop the majors in wins.

This was the Cardinals’ 21st shutout of the season, their most since 1968 when Bob Gibson and the rest of the staff had 30.

Fiers gave up one earned run and three hits in seven innings.

The Cardinals broke through in the seventh. After hit a drive that went about 3 feet wide of the foul pole, Matt Holliday walked with one out and reached third on Matt Adams’ single, continuing home when Gold Glove center fielder Carlos Gomez slipped and mishandled the hit for an error.

Jhonny Peralta singled home Adams.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha, whose last start was skipped after he struggled in his return from a shoulder injury, is scheduled to start Saturday against Cincinnati. In two starts this month, he pitched seven innings and had a 7.71 ERA. Wacha threw his third bullpen session since his last start on Wednesday and did enough to convince manager Mike Matheny he was ready.

UP NEXT

Brewers: Kyle Lohse (12-9, 3.81 ERA) pitches Thursday night against the Cardinals. He has lost five of his past six decisions, including twice to St. Louis. In those two losses, in which he lasted four innings both times, Lohse gave up 14 runs on 13 hits, including four homers.

Cardinals: Shelby Miller (10-9, 3.75) has given up one earned run over 20 innings in three starts this month. He has won his past two decisions, following four consecutive no decisions. Miller won both of his starts against Milwaukee this season, giving up four runs in 12 innings.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western hires Chris Canady as women’s tennis coach

MWSUMissouri Western State University Director of Athletics Kurt McGuffin has announced the hiring of Chris Canady as Head Women’s Tennis Coach at MWSU.

“I am excited to welcome Chris to our department and family,” McGuffin said. “He is from Missouri and played and coached at MIAA foe Southwest Baptist. He brings a pedigree of having been in successful programs and it is my belief he will build a tradition of excellence both on and off the court with our tennis team.”

Canady replaces Tom Smith, who took over the program in 2013 after a 25 year run as the head men’s basketball coach at Missouri Western. Canady will officially take over the program in October. He becomes Missouri Western’s first full-time women’s tennis coach.

“I want to thank Coach Smith for everything he has done the last few months as tennis coach.  He stepped up and did our department a huge service and has done everything I asked him to do, and more, when he agreed to take this position,” McGuffin said.

Most recently, Canady has been the director of high performance for Upper St. Clair Tennis Development in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Canady is familiar with the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association, having played and coached at Southwest Baptist University.

Since joining USC Tennis Development Program in 2011, Canady worked tirelessly developing a culture that helped produce numerous nationally and sectionally ranked players. Players Canady has worked with in the program have attended some of the top tennis programs in the country.

“Having both competed and coached in the MIAA, I have a clear understanding of what it takes to be successful at this level,” Canady said. “Combining that with all the experience I have gained over the last six years coaching at the Division I level and developing high performance junior players, I am confident we can have MWSU competing for MIAA championships in relatively short order.”

After graduating with a B.S. in recreation from SBU in 2007, Canady worked as a graduate assistant at his alma mater, helping both the men’s and women’s tennis programs claim MIAA championships in 2008. Canady then moved on to Stony Brook University where he assisted both the men’s and women’s tennis programs for two seasons (2008-2010), focusing on player development and domestic recruiting. Since then, Canady has been a volunteer assistant with the California University of Pennsylvania women’s team, primarily working on international recruitment.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals’ bullpen struggles in 7-5 loss to Chicago

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis both gave up runs for the first time in nearly three months as the Kansas City Royals’ dominant bullpen was touched up Tuesday night in a 7-5 loss to the Chicago White Sox.

Davis replaced Herrera with two on in the seventh inning and walked Jose Abreu to load the bases for Conor Gillaspie, who cleared them with a triple to right-center on a 2-2 pitch to give Chicago a 7-5 lead.

That ended Herrera’s scoreless streak at 30 2/3 innings, dating to June 24. Also snapped was Davis’ shutout streak of 31 2/3 innings, a club record for a reliever, with the first run charged to him since June 25.

The rare bullpen failure prevented Kansas City from gaining ground on AL Central leader Detroit, which lost at Minnesota. The Royals remained 1 1/2 games behind the Tigers, but still lead Seattle for the second wild-card spot.

Kansas City used nine pitchers, a club record for a nine-inning game, in a contest that lasted 4 hours, 16 minutes — the longest nine-inning game in Royals history.

Nori Aoki had his second straight four-hit game, including a sixth-inning single that put the Royals up 5-4, but this time the bullpen couldn’t hold it.

Adam Eaton had four hits, matching his career high, and scored two runs for Chicago.

Royals manager Ned Yost went to his bullpen early when starter Liam Hendriks was pulled after three-plus innings. He gave up four runs on seven hits and a walk.

In his past three outings, Hendriks has allowed 11 runs and 18 hits in 9 1/3 innings.

White Sox rookie right-hander Chris Bassitt also failed to make it out of the fourth. He threw 94 pitches in 3 2/3 innings, allowing three runs on six hits and four walks.

Eric Surkamp (2-0) got the win, and Zach Putnam worked a perfect ninth for his fifth save.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: DH-1B Paul Konerko, who has not played since breaking his left hand on Sept. 2, took extended batting practice. “When he’s fit to play he’ll get some time,” manager Robin Ventura said. “I don’t necessarily want him going out there not having swung a bat in two weeks. He’ll get an at-bat here or there to acclimate him.”

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy, who skipped two starts because of a sore shoulder, threw a four-inning simulated game. “There’s nothing wrong,” Duffy said. “I felt stronger than I did for about the past month.” He is slated to start Monday in Cleveland.

UP NEXT

White Sox: LHP Chris Sale, an AL Cy Young Award contender, starts the series finale. He has trouble with Royals DH Billy Butler, who has a .359 career average against him with three home runs, two doubles and 10 RBIs in 39 at-bats.

Royals: RHP Yordano Ventura has nine made consecutive quality starts, a club record for rookies.

— Associated Press —

Griffon volleyball gets swept by No. 14 Central Missouri

MWSUThe Missouri Western volleyball team battled through three close sets Tuesday night, eventually falling to No. 14 Central Missouri 3-0.

The Griffons dropped the first set 25-23, then lost the second 25-18 before falling 26-24 in the third after allowing the Mules to come back.

MWSU spread offense around but no players finished with double-digit kills. Erica Rottinghaus led the team with nine. Jordan Chohon finished with 27 assists. Sarah Faubel led the team with 12 digs, followed by 11 from Rottinghaus.

The loss dropped the Griffons to 6-3 on the year and 0-1 in MIAA play. They host Emporia State in the MWSU Fieldhouse Friday night.

— MWSU Sports Information —

St. Louis loses to Milwaukee in 12 innings

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Carlos Gomez walked, stole second and third and scored the go-ahead run on a bloop hit by rookie Hector Gomez in the 12th inning as the Milwaukee Brewers ended the NL Central-leading St. Louis Cardinals’ three-game winning streak with a 3-2 victory Tuesday night.

Brandon Kintzler (3-3) got the last out in the 11th and Francisco Rodriguez closed for his 42nd save in 47 chances. The third-place Brewers have won five of six and are four games back of St. Louis, which has a 2 1/2-game lead on Pittsburgh with 11 to go.

Gerardo Parra homered and rookie Matt Clark’s sacrifice fly tied it against Trevor Rosenthal in the ninth. The Cardinals were blanked on four hits over the last 11 innings after jumping on Wily Peralta for two quick runs in the first.

Lance Lynn worked seven strong innings for St. Louis before Rosenthal was saddled with his sixth blown save in 50 chances.

The Cardinals opened the first with three straight singles and Matt Adams walked on a full count for an RBI, the last two pitches high and well out of the strike zone. A second run scored on a double-play ball by Jhonny Peralta, 2 for 15 with the bases loaded.

Peralta also went seven innings and gave up just two hits in the last six, finishing the year 3-1 with a 2.18 ERA against St. Louis.

The Brewers dropped three of four at home to St. Louis last week and are 7-10 overall against the Cardinals.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha is scheduled to throw in the bullpen Wednesday. He missed his last turn due to ineffectiveness coming off the disabled list from a shoulder injury.

BIG CROWD

Paid attendance of 44,529 was the 47th sellout with five home games to go. Although there were hundreds of empty seats, the Cardinals have capitalized on the Ballpark Village development.

UP NEXT

Brewers: Mike Fiers (6-2, 1.84 ERA) makes his first start since hitting Giancarlo Stanton in the face with a pith last week. Fiers is 2-0 with a 1.31 ERA in five career games against St. Louis, two of them starts.

Cardinals: Adam Wainwright (18-9, 2.56) has won three straight starts, and he beat the Brewers with a complete game his last time out. Wainwright is 11-7 with a 2.43 ERA in his career against Milwaukee, and 2-1 with a 4.22 ERA in three starts this season.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western women’s golf team finishes 4th at NSU Invitational

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s golf team finished in fourth place on Tuesday after completing the final round of the Northeastern State University Golf Classic in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.

MWSU sat in fourth place after day one and held their ground with a 312 team score in the second round. The winner of the tournament was Central Oklahoma winning with a team score of 604 through the two days of competition.

Maidson Romjue again set the pace for the Griffons with a 73 second round. She finished the tournament with a 148 placing her in a tie for third place. The other top-10 finisher for MWSU was Celine Lim she recorded a total score of 153 placing her in eighth place.

Arkansas Tech’s Megan Jeffery and Central Oklahoma’s Marla Souvannasing finished the tournament atop the leader board shooting a 147 in the two rounds of golf.

The Griffons are back in action on Sept. 29-30 at the Fort Hays State University Invitational with an expected start time of 8 a.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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